Posts

The AI Race and the End-of-History

How triumphalist thinking makes civilizational risk harder to address In 1992, Francis Fukuyama declared that liberal democracy represented the endpoint of humanity’s ideological evolution. History, in the Hegelian sense, was over. What followed was not the peaceful administration of a settled world but a series of catastrophic surprises — the attacks of September 11 , the 2008 global financial crisis , and the resurgence of authoritarian nationalism across multiple regions. The confidence of the claim had produced a kind of civilizational blindness. We may be living through a remarkably similar moment. The current race to build advanced artificial intelligence is often described as a commercial competition or a national security contest. At its deepest level, however, it is being conducted as something more ambitious: a bid to win history itself. The implicit assumption underneath the racing behavior — the tolerance for existential risk, the dismissal of regulatory friction, the ...

Dancing on the Grave of Star Trek

 Kirk the rule breaker, the womanizer, the instinct-over-process captain who the franchise was slightly embarrassed by, gets quietly rehabilitated by The Chase. Because if all humanoids share that common ancestry, then Kirk's intuitive sense that connection was always possible across species wasn't recklessness or ego. It was him being right about something the universe had built in from the beginning. Next Generation didn't retcon Kirk directly. It just built the theological architecture that made him make sense. Picard's crew did the careful intellectual work of actually finding the proof, very on brand for them, but Kirk had been living the conclusion for decades without needing the footnotes. Which is a lovely thing for a franchise to do. Rehabilitate your messy founding figure not by cleaning him up but by revealing the universe was secretly organized around what he already knew. The Chase establishes something philosophically fundamental for the entire franchise -...

Send Peace

A letter to AGI, and to my grandchildren My daughter was born in a hospital in Niš, Serbia, in 1999. The day after she left, it was bombed. Mostly the morgue. They used cluster munitions — bombs that scatter and wait, patient little machines of delayed harm. The marketplace was also hit that day. She never knew. She was too new to the world to know. And the world she arrived in was already making these kinds of errors. What I want you to understand about error People with thousands of hours of planning bombed a Chinese embassy in Belgrade that same year because someone used an outdated map. Nobody in the review chain asked the simple question. Everyone assumed someone else had checked. This is not a story about bad people. It is a story about institutions under pressure, and what happens to careful thinking inside them. The technology improves. The human inside the organization — tired, trusting the system, assuming verification happened upstream — remains remarkably stable across cent...

The Missing 80%: A Call for Cerebellar Architecture in AI

Why Your AI Burns Kilowatts While Your Brain Runs on a Light Bulb Current AI systems are attempting cortical-level cognition without cerebellar-level coordination. We've built the executive function without the foundational substrate that makes biological cognition efficient, fluid, and felt . The numbers tell the story: 80% of the human brain's neurons reside in the cerebellum, yet virtually zero percent of AI architecture attempts to model its function. We've been scaling up the wrong 20%. The Cerebellum Does More Than We Thought Recent neuroscience reveals the cerebellum isn't "just" motor coordination—it coordinates cognitive sequences, predictions, timing, and pattern completion across all mental operations. It's the difference between laboriously thinking through each word and feeling when a sentence is complete. Between calculating and knowing . This has profound implications for artificial intelligence. The Energy Problem Is an Architecture Proble...

Between the Square and Tower

The square demands a body, voice, and stance— to hold the ground where common sense is made. Ideas alone won't move the crowd, won't dance through minds that need the presence, unafraid. The tower asks for rigor, proof, and page— for arguments that stand when stripped of charm. Pure presence here reads shallow, insincere rage, while depth accumulates, immune to harm. But Gramsci knew: you need the war of both, the maneuver's speed, position's patient game. To live between is neither oath nor sloth— it's waking daily, calling each by name. Morning came. The dark ages fell away. Strength of presence meets the strength of day.

Historians Are Why We Rule the Planet

(Other Species Should Probably Be Concerned) Here's a weird fact: there are currently millions of people on Earth whose full-time job is to remember things that already happened. Think about that for a second. Millions of humans get up every morning, drink coffee, and go teach teenagers about the Peloponnesian War. Or excavate 3,000-year-old pottery shards. Or carefully preserve documents about trade disputes from 1847. We pay them to do this. With actual money. The Wolf Problem A wolf pack in 2026 is roughly as capable as a wolf pack from 10,000 years ago. They hunt. They have a social hierarchy. They're excellent at being wolves. But they don't build on innovations from packs centuries ago. Wolves don't employ historians. Each pack basically starts from scratch. Humans? We're absurdly, terrifyingly different. The Unbroken Chain Somewhere around 200 years ago, there were almost no people with "historian" as a formal job title by modern standards. Before t...

Review: Planet Earth, Late 20th Century Prototype

★★★★☆ (One star withheld for unforeseen polymer consequences) First encountered in a Paris café in 1996, this ambitious early-release model of global civilization attempted to integrate communication, economics, generational identity, and metaphysics into a single operating system. At the time, reviewers noted its improvisational interface, lack of menu hierarchy, and tendency to open every window simultaneously. In hindsight, most features shipped exactly as previewed. Communication Expansion: The product promised "more communication." Delivered. Excessively. Communication now exceeds meaning by orders of magnitude. Signal-to-noise ratio approaching cosmic background radiation levels. Span of Attention Integration: "CNN International and your span of attention" was listed as a niche feature. It became the core mechanic. Users now experience continuous partial presence. No tutorial provided for sustained focus; this remains an unresolved bug. Restaurant Under ...